University abbrev. (and article usage with names)
Beverly Flanigan
flanigan at OAK.CATS.OHIOU.EDU
Thu Oct 28 17:23:33 UTC 1999
The Ohio State University is another. This usage has occasionally been
picked up by Ohio University bigwigs in their PR lit, even though "the" is
not part of our name. Guess they think it sounds more prestigious (there's
a lot of that thinking around here lately).
At 09:04 AM 10/28/99 -0700, Peter McGraw wrote:
>As I recall, a well-known university in your home state is officially
>named "THE Johns Hopkins University," and I'm a little less sure, but I
>THINK Penn State's official name is "THE Pennsylvania State University."
>Colloquial usage, of course, would tend to leave off the article
>(unless local usage in those places has this same quirk), making these
>actually examples of the opposite of the BYU usage you describe.
>
>Peter Mc.
>
>On Thu, 28 Oct 1999 09:13:07 -0600 David Bowie <db.list at PMPKN.NET>
>wrote:
>
>
> > And now for the oddity in article usage: When i first came here, one of
> > the things i noticed was that several local speakers use the definite
> > article when naming BYU, as in "So you want to drive to *the* Brigham
> > Young University?" or "Here's how to get to *the* BYU". This seems odd
> > to my Southern Maryland born-and-bred self--i can't put an article,
> > definite or not, before the name of a school ending with "university"
> > or "college" (as opposed to a school name beginning with those words,
> > where i can freely include the definite article, and it would in fact
> > usually be required). Has anyone anywhere noticed similar constructions
> > with school names *ending* in those words?
>
>----------------------
>Peter A. McGraw
>Linfield College
>McMinnville, Oregon
>pmcgraw at linfield.edu
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